The Canadian Press
Lisa Wallace
OTTAWA–The Ottawa Senators are happy to be home.
Coming off a disastrous seven-game, 15-day road trip, the Senators made the most of home ice as they snapped a five-game losing streak last night with a 3-2 win over the N.Y. Rangers.
The victory was just Ottawa’s second in regulation time since Nov. 11. And there was no denying the sense of relief when the final horn sounded.
“I think when that final buzzer went, there was a sigh from a lot of people, fans included,” said Zack Smith, whose third-period goal held up as the winner.
“It was a good feeling,” he added. “They’re a good team over there with a good goaltender, so it was a big confidence boost for us.”
Bobby Ryan and Cody Ceci also scored for the Senators (10-13-7).
Craig Anderson, with 27 saves, ended a personal seven-game losing streak and picked up his first win since Nov. 11.
“It feels good to win,” said Anderson. “After what we went through, I think coming home and putting on the effort we did, and getting the results we wanted, it’s a good feeling in here.”
For the first time since Dec. 1 the Senators scored first and played the entire game with a lead.
It clearly made a difference.
During their brutal stretch, the Senators had games where they played well but seemed to lose all confidence after giving up the first goal and were forced to chase the game.
“We’ve had a lot of those games that were just as good but just didn’t turn for us,” said head coach Guy Boucher.
“Back at home, for the first time in a long while, you could feel the freshness, what you should feel at home,” he noted.
“And because of that, our players got the energy and we got the first goal, and I thought we defended great.
“I thought our goalie was outstanding and all our lines were good,” Boucher added.
The victory is a much-needed spark during a very bleak time.
“We needed something,” said Ryan.
“We were at the point where moral victories weren’t really adding up for us, so we needed to find a way to get two points and you hope that this becomes a stepping point.”
Michael Grabner and Pavel Buchnevich scored for the Rangers (16-12-3) as Henrik Lundqvist stopped 27 shots.
Ottawa took a two-goal lead just eight seconds into the third as Tom Pyatt, from behind the net, found Smith in front to score his second of the season.
The Rangers cut the lead back to one four minutes later as Buchnevich netted his 11th, beating Anderson with a one-timer.
Chris Kreider picked up his 200th career point on the play.
The Rangers pulled Lundqvist with just over a minute to go but the Senators were able to hold on for the win.
Ottawa regained the lead late in the second after Matt Duchene showed some great patience before finding Ceci wide-open for his second goal in as many games.
“That’s five games in a row where Duchene is really good,” said Boucher.
“You can really see him picking it up and feeling it, and the guys getting to know him, too, so that’s the chemistry you have to build.”
Trailing 1-0, the Rangers were able to tie the game at the three-minute mark of the second largely due to some poor defensive coverage by Erik Karlsson.
Mats Zuccarello was able to find Grabner, who got in behind Karlsson and beat Anderson from in close.
Ryan opened the scoring for the Senators early in the first period as he was able to take a pass from Mark Stone and beat Lundqvist with a one-timer for just his second goal of the season.
This marked the first time the Senators opened the scoring in six games
Elsewhere in the NHL, Nashville dumped Vancouver 7-1, Dallas beat the N.Y. Islanders 5-2, and Boston edged Detroit 3-2 (OT).







